My critics often complain that, rather than engaging in the complex process of finding solutions to the state’s problems, I prefer the easier route of wallowing in insults, smear tactics, bathroom humor, and innuendo. These complaints often come from people who are mentally warped, morally twisted, flatulent, and suspected of appearing in crack-smoking videos with either Amy Winehouse or Olympia Snowe. (It’s hard to tell with the bad lighting.)

Nevertheless, I take such negative judgments seriously. In an effort to disprove these allegations by constipated, sexually promiscuous mutants with links to terrorists and/or the Baldacci administration (it’s hard to tell with the bad lighting), I’m devoting this column to my plan to improve state government in one simple step:

Fire Matthew Dunlap.

Dunlap is Maine’s secretary of state and, by all accounts, a nice guy. He reads books, hunts deer, and knows how to mix a decent martini because he used to be a bartender. He’s had other jobs, too: radio-show host, proofreader, textile-mill worker, and dishwasher. You end up doing that kind of work if you decide in grad school to study literary theory. They’re laying off literary theorists all across Maine.

Fortunately for Dunlap, he’s shown some aptitude for politics. In 1996, he got elected to the state House of Representatives from Old Town. He impressed Democratic leadership, and in his second term, he was appointed chairman of the fish and wildlife committee, a position that allowed him to sponsor legislation banning lead sinkers and protecting snapping turtles. During his eight years in the House, he also talked a lot about tax reform. You know what that amounted to.

Forced from office by term limits in 2004, Dunlap decided to run for secretary of state, a position for which he possessed no obvious qualifications (“Would you care for a cocktail with your driver’s license?”). That hardly mattered, because in Maine the job is filled by the Legislature, where he was generally well liked. And how much trouble could he get into issuing learners’ permits?

An idiot could do it. Several have.

Dunlap, however, had problems. In his first year, legislators complained that people trying to renew their licenses at Bureau of Motor Vehicles offices were being forced to wait hours. Dunlap blamed the delays on computer problems and got the Legislature to authorize extra staff to speed things up.

In 2006, there were news stories about drivers being arrested for operating after their licenses were suspended. Except their licenses weren’t suspended. Again, Dunlap faulted the computers.

Later that year, the federal government filed suit against the state because the secretary of state’s office had failed to implement changes in the voting-rights law. The error, according to Dunlap, lay with those darned computers.

In 2007, with the state facing a budget crisis, the governor asked Dunlap to cut spending by $300,000. He decided Maine could do without primary elections, an idea met with near-unanimous opposition. The fault this time appeared to be the software in his brain.

SMILING FACES | November 03, 2014 In an attempt to ease the state’s severe cognitive-dissonance shortage, the arbiters of good taste have spent this election season beseeching candidates to practice both civility and sincerity.

REASON HIDDEN | October 24, 2014 Late last year, Michaud publicly acknowledged his homosexuality. The experts were quick to claim it wouldn’t be a big factor in the gubernatorial race.

SOMETHING BORROWED, SOMETHING BLUE | October 16, 2014 Want to save the taxpayers of Maine over $60 million? It’s so simple even somebody with no political skills at all can do it.